PHILADELPHIA (CBS) — Adopting a child from Russia was never easy, but the Russian parliament is considering making it impossible for Americans to do so.

That’s distressing to those who have helped Philadelphia area families adopt Russian children in the past.

There have been horror stories about Americans adopting Russian children, so much so that in July the United States and Russia signed a new agreement on adoption regulations. But this new bill now before the Russian parliament has nothing to do with families or children. It’s retaliation for the US enacting the Magnitsky Act — a law that imposes sanctions on Russians for human rights abuses.

“Don’t you just love it? Let’s just drag children who need families into it,” says CJ Lyford sarcastically. She is a Montgomery County attorney who has helped families sort through the issues around Russian adoption.

(CJ Lyford. Photo provided)

Lyford (right) says if the law passes, it’s Russian children who would be hurt.

“If there were enough people in Russia available to adopt domestically, it wouldn’t be an issue,” she tells KYW Newsradio, “but these people who don’t favor international adoption apparently are not able or willing to adopt themselves.”

Top Content On CBSPhilly

Pat Loeb's radio experience has the makings of a country song: she lived a lot of places, went down a lot of roads, but they all led her home -- to Philadelphia and to KYW Newsradio, where she started her career some 30 years ago.
Born and rais...